RawStory

Jamie Raskin ready to battle Trump 'assault'  2.0 in new role

WASHINGTON — After leading the second impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump and then serving as a member of the select Jan. 6 committee, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) is readying for a new role come January: Democrat’s lead constitutional watchdog in Congress.

This week, after relinquishing his party’s top slot on the House Oversight Committee, Raskin looks to have secured the ranking member position on his chamber’s all-important Judiciary Committee. The committee jockeying doesn’t mean he thinks there won’t be any action in Oversight under the incoming Trump administration.

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‘Cracked under the pressure’: Alarm sounded as postal worker suicides quadruple

Content warning: This article discusses suicide and self-harm. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis and needs emotional support, help is available 24/7 via call or text at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org.

Over the course of nearly 20 years, Carlos Ulloa has worked for the United States Postal Service in a range of capacities — from starting as a letter carrier to delivering parcels to driving trucks and serving as a supervisor of distribution operations.

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'Pardon everyone': Marjorie Taylor Greene wants clemency for 'violent' Jan. 6 rioters

WASHINGTON — Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) has a list of all of the people she believes should be pardoned for the Jan. 6 attacks on the Capitol, and she confessed even "the violent ones" should be among those on the list because they aren't "rapists."

Speaking to reporters at the Capitol on Wednesday, Greene said that the attackers should be allowed a pass because they're not as bad as other criminals.

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EXCLUSIVE: Senate Dems consider whether Biden should ‘clear the slate’ and pardon Trump

President Joe Biden’s 180-degree flip on Sunday from his promise not to pardon his son Hunter Biden prompted fierce backlash from politicians and pundits, calling the move a “tremendous strategic blunder that will haunt Democrats,” “the worst thing a president could possibly do to his party” and “the biggest public corruption scandal ever.”

While some legal experts have called Biden “justified” in the pardon of his son in anticipation of continued attacks from the incoming Donald Trump administration, departing Sen. Joe Manchin (I-WV) suggested that Biden could make the scales of justice “more balanced” by preemptively pardoning the president-elect.

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Trump Cabinet pick raises alarm on unchecked domestic terrorism

This is the second in a two-part series about what Trump's return to the White House and Kash Patel's appointment as the next director of the FBI means for the agency's ongoing efforts to disrupt accelerationist terror plots. Read Part 1 here.

In August 2019, a 21-year-old white man named Patrick Crusius drove 650 miles to El Paso, Texas, walked into a Walmart with a rifle and opened fire, killing 23 people in an attack that deliberately targeted Hispanics.

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'Going to come after you': Inside Kash Patel's 'lawfare' suit against ex-Pence official

Kash Patel, the MAGA loyalist named by President-elect Donald Trump to lead the FBI, has financially backed a lawsuit against former Trump administration official derided as a “RINO” that raises questions about how he would wield power as head of the nation’s preeminent law enforcement agency.

Richard Grenell, who served as acting director of national intelligence during the first Trump administration, has confirmed in a court filing that the Kash Patel Legal Offense Trust (now known as the Kash Foundation) contributed $7,500 to support his defamation lawsuit against Olivia Troye, a former counterterrorism advisor to Vice President Mike Pence.

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Will Trump back the FBI’s battle against domestic extremists? He won’t say.

Alex Jones, the notorious conspiracy-monger and MAGA propagandist, announced on his Election Day show that it was “doomsday for the globalists.” But he warned his listeners to be on the lookout for false flag attacks calculated to try to spoil candidate Donald Trump’s victory.

“And now, we’re beginning to see the signs,” Jones said. “But this, too, will fail. No one’s gonna buy it.”

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Trump allies promise revenge as Dems ram through Biden judges

WASHINGTON — Something strange has been happening in the U.S. Senate this month: Senators have been working. And overtime at that.

The 118th Congress isn’t just the least productive in modern history. It’s also the laziest in recent memory. But former President Donald Trump’s win has awoken Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s slumbering Senate, as he’s been ramming through a slate of outstanding, Democrat-approved judicial nominees before Republicans take over Washington in January.

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'Chaos': Small biz owner hit by Trump’s last tariff reveals key flaw that hurts companies

President-elect Donald Trump is following through on a key campaign promise of imposing double-digit tariffs on goods imported into the United States. One small business owner is worried that the new tariffs could set American companies back in more ways than one.

On Tuesday, the New York Times reported that Trump's proposed new day one 25% tariff on goods from Canada and Mexico and 10% on Chinese imports is already provoking a back-and-forth with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum. She warned that if Trump followed through, she would retaliate with a new tariff on imports from the United States. The Times pointed out that the tariffs would affect a vast number of industries, including auto manufacturing, where many American car companies depend on parts imported from Canada and Mexico.

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Exclusive: Multiple Republicans reveal plan to boot Mike Johnson as speaker

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Conservatives on Capitol Hill still aren’t sold on Speaker Mike Johnson.

While Johnson won the support of the House Republican Conference behind closed doors earlier this month, he’s still got to secure majority support on the floor of the House of Representatives on Jan. 3.

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Your holiday mail is at risk as USPS copes with alarming rise of theft and security issues

As Americans flood the mail with holiday cards and gifts, their valuables and personal information remain at risk for theft due to internal bad actors and issues with deploying modernized technology, according to two recent reports from the United States Postal Service’s Office of Inspector General.

Thefts committed by U.S. Postal Service employees spiked to 1,790 closed cases in fiscal year 2023, and totaled 5,961 closed internal mail theft cases between October 1, 2019, and September 30, 2023, according to an Oct. 30 report.

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Doctors in Congress brace for Dr. Oz and RFK Jr.'s 'crazy ideas'

Like more than 72 percent of Americans using community water systems, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) — an orthopedic surgeon, three-term senator and former host of the “Senate Doctors” show — has consumed fluoridated water.

“I grew up with it. Still have my teeth,” Barrasso told Raw Story while riding the tram underneath the U.S. Capitol this week.

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GOP says good riddance to Gaetz — with most refusing even to say his name

WASHINGTON – Republicans on Capitol Hill are privately celebrating after former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) withdrew his nomination for attorney general. Publicly, many won’t even say his name.

“So you don’t even want to talk about Matt Gaetz?” Raw Story asked the incoming chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee in a cramped Capitol elevator.

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